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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1918)
THE OREGON DAILY- JOURNAL,- PORTLAND,. FRIDAY.' JtJNE21,- 1918 Pledge Yourself to Save and Buy Wan Savings Stamps on June 28 CLUB CALENDAR ; ? r - Bat are ay, Jaae tt . S . , . Portland Woman's dub luncheon at 12 .-90 p m. at the -Hotel Multnomah for Dr. Esther -Lovejoy. , City Federation of Women's Organlxatlons at the Motel Portland assembly room at t p. m. - . - SOCIAL CALENDAR Satardar, Jaae tt Garden fete for the benefit of the British Red Cross to be given at AM sour. th residence of Mr. and Mrs. William MacMaster, from S until 10 p. m.. Admission 25 cents. All invited. Interest Turns to Garden Fete at Ardgour Women of British Red Cross Ar ranging for Garden Fete on v Saturday. By Hons Lawler ALL. Interest centers In the garden fete to be held Saturday afternoon and -evening at Ardgour, the suburban home of Mr. and Mrs. William Mac Master. The affair is being arranged by the women of the British Ked Cross and will call forth hosts of people. Arrangements have been made-to ac commodate several thousand guests. Refreshments will be served with a cafeteria supper In the evening for those who wish to remain over. There will be a splendid program, both In the afternoon and evening. Mrs. K. H. McColllster of the Collegiate Alumnae committee of entertainment has ar ranged to repeat the A. C. A. pageant given earlier this season. It will be presented on the lawn, about the mid dle of the afternoon and in the evening besides musical numbers there will be a number of dances by Miss Gladys Har rlson, professional dancer, recently from Pantages circuit- A number of prom Inent matrons, maids and men, will as sist the committee in all the various booths. The dance pageant program will be given by Miss Gladys Har rison, and pupils Natalie Har rison, Hazel Fassett, V'ida Chrls- teneen, Nina Kltts, Frances Van Duyne, Cora Mont el th. Alice McKenna. Kleanore Hurt and Harland Harned The numbers will Include : I. The musicians awake the revelers from the four corners of the srarth dancer with cymbals, dancer with trum pet, dancer with tambourine. II. The Duchess of Nowhere. III. The Joy of Touth. IV. The Spirit of Spring; the pirit vi sfcubuinii. V. Hindu Bow and Arrow. VI. Stephanie Gavotte. ' VII. Priestess of Bacchus. VIII. Night. IX. Yogi. ... Married In Montana News of the marriage of MIhs Maxine Miller, daughter of Mrs. Charles Miller of Portland, and Harold M. Werre at Helena has been received here. The ceremony took place June 8 at. the chapel of Bishop Faber of the Episcopal diocese of M6ntana. Miss Marguerite Young attended the bride and Thomas Uonsor was best man. The bride was graduated from the Lincoln high school In the class of 1916. The bridegroom re celved his education at the Bozeman Mont., Agricultural college and has been teaching agriculture In the Great Falls schools for the last year. Mr. and Mrs. Merre will be at home to their friends at Oreat Falls, 609 Ninth street north after .July, 1. I tarewelf dinner Olteir. Fred 'X6hb ' i..A a .farewell to Fred Cobb, who leaves this week for training at Camp Lewis, the Jolly Fellows club gave a dinner Monday night at the .home of Miss Marie Standard. Decorations were In red, white and blue with red and white carnations on the tables. The members of the club Include the Misses Mary, Anne and Martha Voth, . Jane Ellis, and Messrs. Horace Turpln, Omer and Carl Mulligan, Martin Crouse, Fred Cobb and the hostess, Mlest Marie Standard. Guest of Mrs. Linn .Mrs. R. B. von Klelnsmid and small daughter, Elizabeth, of Tucson. Ariz., have arrived In Portland and will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Linn for the summer. Dr. Von Klelnsmid, who is president of the State university of Arlsona, will come to Portland later to Join his family. Honolulu Visitors Judge and Mrs. S. B. Kemp and daughter of Honolulu are visiting in Portland, the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gramm of 1235 East Ash street. Judge Kemp is associate jus tice of Hawaii. Mrs. Blumauer Hostess Mrs. Sol Blumauer entertained in formally at luncheon Thursday for a few Intimate friends at the Portland .hotel. MISS ESTHER FRITZ is an attractive and pop ular girl, whose engage ment to E. J. Berg was an nounced last week. 1? ','' 1 f f v . V- ' :: v f I I v. '. i VS. f n V tr' " 6 -aAiiiihia&Mi Rock Cod, Ling And Flounder .Fine Eating Food Administration Urges Peo ple to Increase Consumption of These Fish. shop Offering Good Books Cheap Demand Is Found for Baby Bug gies and for Discarded Suits for Men. GAPT. ADELAIDE B. BAYLIS, only woman in the military service of national or state recognition. Household Hixits ASK your fish dealer for ling cod, rock cod and flounder, and do It frequently. This Is the advice of Assistant Fed eral Food Administrator Frank M. Warren, who says these are three ex cellent varieties of fish which are little appreciated by the public and which have the added merit of being much lens expensive than salmon, halibut or other fish more familiar on Portland tables. "The food administration Is now en deavoring to make arrangements," said Mr, Warren today, "for having an ample suply of these fish: made available for the Portland markets at a cost to the retailer of about 4 cents per pound. Ling cod, rock cod and flounder are being caught In considerable quantities by the salmon fishermen, who call this catch 'scrap fish.' and throw them back Into the water again for want of a market for them. The food administration wants to see these fish used. They are a good food and can be retailed cheaply. The only difficulty In the way of a steady and abundant supply is the lack of a demand for them by the public Under the arrangement which can be made, retailers should be able to get plenty of ling cod. rock cod and floun ders on short notice, and it is to be hoped they will cooperate and lay In reasonable supplies to supply the de mand which the food administration now asks the public to make in order that this food supply may be utilised. Kvery housewife should assist In get ting and keeping these inexpensive fish In eTur markets by -asking for them and buying them frequently." These fish, like several other varieties.- the food administration warns. may be spoiled by Improper methods of cooking. The ling ami rock cods are not pan fish and should not be fried, but may be boiled or baked and served with a sauce. The flounder, experts say. Is delicious when baked. Expert ments with these fish are now being made and recipes will, in the near fu ture. De aistriDutea rrom the war kitchen at the Liberty temple. : By Telia Wlaaer A LARGE stock- of books is located on the first floor of the Red Cross Shop. 106 Fifth street. Fiction, the best as well aa the lightest of summer reading may be found here at prices that range from 6 cents to 50 cents. Nearly all - copies are as fresh aa new books. Text books along many lines, books of poetry, encyclo pedia, sets of your favorite author, rttky all be found at the shop at mod erate prices. The second floor Is asking for screens, something large enough to screen off sleeping places at a summer cottage. A customer is waiting for these. Baby buggies and go-carts are sold out aa fast as re ceived. Dishes and glassware of all kinds are in constant- demand. The third floor announces a Friday sale of both men's and women's hats. Specials in a variety of other articles will also feature the weakend. The demand for men's suits on the third floor is greater at all times than the supply. Dis carded suits will be welcomed by. Mrs. Van Duzer. who is the efficient mana ger of - this floor. A vory Interesting meeting of the Eat Side Central V. C. T. U. was held last Friday at the Louise home, nine mem bers being present.- Thirty inmates of the home listened to an entertaining program furnished by Mrs. Mat lie Sleeth, county president of the W. C. T. U., Mrs. C. W. Barsee and Mrs. Emma Walton, also Mrs. Waltort' nephew, Fred McGrew. The union con tributed 25 pounds of clean cotton cloths and cheesecloth for surgical (dressing, also a large package of In fants' clothing, and a cash offering of 2.60. The next regular meetlrg will be held at the home of Mrs. Mary A. Beckwith. 587 East Pine street (East Ankeny'car, get off at Fifteenth 3treet. walk two blocks south) Friday after noon at 2 p. m. A reception to new members secured during White Ribbon week will be given. Mrs. Addlton will address th meeting. Light refresh ments will be served. The committee, on public information. division on woman's war work, issues the following: A conference of women will be held In Chicago on July 9. 10 and 11 to discuss ways and means for the coming Liberty loan campaign. The meeting will repre sent the members of the national woman s Liberty loan committee women chairmen of the federal reserve districts, and state chairmen of the woman's Liberty loan committee. Mrs. William McAdoo, chairman of the na tional woman's Liberty loan committee. wui preside. "There will be no set program at the meeting," said Mrs. Antoinette Funk. vice chairman of the national woman's Liberty loan committee. "It is to be a workers' meeting, and we expect to make very far reaching plans for the fourth war loan, mindful as we Bhall be of the president's recent words regard' ing the war revenue bill. "Many counties throughout the coun try have turned their Liberty loan com mittees over to the women." said Mrs. Funk. "We have at this headquarters reports from over 3000 counties and from -500,000 women who worked on committees during the Third Liberty loan drive. The Red Cross authorizes the follow ing: Miss Annie W. Goodrich." just appoint ed dean of the army school of nursing, which will train student nurses in con nection wlth the military hospitals, has Issued, through the American Red Cross, the. following call to nurses to enroll for the military hospitals and to young women to become student nurses in training schools for nurses : "To every member of our profession a call goea out today that permits of no hesitation In the response. Each and every one of us Is needed. Where our service can best be rendered, abroad, in the great military hospitals of our train ing camps, or in the civil community, is, m great measure, left for each of us to decide. Let us. immediately make our decision and then throw ourselves, mind ' i? t3 A year has passed since America went to. war. and in that time the American people have been exhorted by every known brand of extortation to save food. The time to see result has come. In. looking for results Washington has found out this: That the public eating places, such aa hotels, restaurants, etc are saving - food ; they are observing meatless and wheatless days religiously, but that as a whole women in their homes are ' doing very little to help make their country' supplies hold out. In their homes! When we sit down and reason out why food saving stops when, it rata as far aa the door of the orlvate dwelling we : come to a very unpleasant conclusion. Patriotism flour ishes only when our neighbor la around to watch -It grow! Sounds unwar ranted, doesn't It? It's true we knit in the fastnesses of our own homes, but there's always the Joy of turning in the finished garment. I fa true we Join the Red Cross and buy Liberty bonds; but these are things money can buy. We would be ashamed to say we had done neither and there is a certain amount of glamour about doing both. Money cannot buy our share of food- saving, though. And there is no glam our about feeding a man creamed cod fish when his mouth Is set for roast beef. There la no glamour' about ret ting up earlier on wheatless days in order to make corn muffins. And it seems as though no one ever knows whether you do it or not! Women in their homea are not food savers. It does look, doesn't It, as though an all-seeing eye were neces sary for the growth of patriotism? If we do not come to this conclusion about the disregard of fdod saving rules, we come to one that would be amusing If the subject matter wasn't vitally serious. Some of us must think Hoover went In for christening the days of the week because he had - a fanciful disposition. "Oh. here's another new kind of. a day." says Mrs. B. aa she opens the evening paper. "Hoover saya we can't have pork this time. - What won't that man think of next?" And the fact that, the announcement of pork less days represents the calcu lations of one of the greatest business minds In the country dees not enter into Mrs. B.'s reasoning. In fact, she doesn't reason, and so she eats what she pleases. The sooner women begin to realise that wheatleos days and meatless days In every American home Is not Idle talk, that much more apt will our coun try be to win the war. Every woman has perhaps at some time discovered she is spending too much of her table allowance in one week to make U Ut a month. America has discovered her people were eating too much meat. wheat and fata to make taem laax as long aa they must last. .If food will win the war. lack of It U apt to lose It It is better to ob serve America's food reguiauona now than Oermany'e later on! Worth Kaewlag Between one-third and one-fourth of the entire -caloric nourishment of a meal la provided by the average dessert course. When fat la too hard to mix satisfac torily with flour it can be softened by adding one part soft fat such as lard, bacon fat or .cottonseed oil, to two parte of the hard fat - Children's dresses . that have grown very tight can be made - larger by . In serting bands of contrasting color on the shoulder- seams and down the mid dle of the back and in the sides In the front Talae ef Milk There U every rea son 'for using milk, no reason for not using it There are people who think It too expensive because It costs a few cents more per quart than ever before. and so have cut down their milk-supply.- This ia a mUtake. Milk even at .the present ; price. Is an( economical food. Milk Is so essential to the pres ent and future health of the nation that it Is vitally necessary to keep the price of It within the reach of every one. THRIFT STAMPS and WAR SAVINGS STAMPS n Sale at Business Office.- The Journal Recipes Offered On Preparing Sea Foods i Arlington Club Chef, Charles Kieffer, , Prepares Sorae.fVC' Dai nty 0 fferings. i i: RECIPES for sea food specialties are the latest contribution of Charjea Kieffer, chef of the Arlington club, te the cause of meat conservation, for which he offers the following sugges- Crab Levis Pick one crab, put in salad dish; surround with shredded let tuce. Mix two tablespooneful of mayon naise with two tableapoonaful of chill sauce; add a little chopped chives and paprika. Mix and put over crab meat Fresh Hhrima Corktall Take . ene third pint fresh shrimp meat add-eltt- spoonsful chill sauce, Juice of one fourth lemon, one dash tobasoo sauce, mix and serve In cocktail glass In cracked Ice. Redtaasper Portagsete Remove bones and skin of flch. season with salt and pepper, put In baking pan : chop one onion and one bean garlic put over fish, cover with freca tomatoes cut in quarters ; put a little butter on top and bake In oven for 20 mtnutea. s and body, to the task which that field brings. . " To every young woman free to give her time and strength goes an appeal for our sick and wounded men and from the sick in our civil community that should command her highest service and that service is most Immediately and fully rendered through the training schools of our' army or civil hospitals. We know that oui; young women will answer as nobly to this call of their country as their brothers have.5 A special business meeting of auxil iary to Company C, 116th engineers, has been called for Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, room 209 Railway Exchange building. The ladies have secured the rights to the regular 50 cent seats for the Orpheum for Monday and Tuesday evenings, June 24 and 25. Seats will be on sale Thursday, Friday and Satur day at the booth on the main floor at Lipman & Wolfe's, or can be obtained from members. The regular meeting of the auxiliary will be held Friday at 2 p. m. at the University club. The sewing will be dispensed with for this week.. Children's war vTorK will continue at the Sunnyside school during vacation. Arrangements have been made for the sale of War Savings Stamps and the collecting 6f magazines at the school house Thursday, June 20, from 1 until 5 o'clock. Parents are urged to encour age and assist the children in keeping up the standard already established in this work: Mrs. William Fehrenbacher. president of the. Tarent-Teacher asso ciation ; Mrs. A. M. Webster and Mrs. W. H. Giles will have charge of the work during the summer. The Portland grade teachers, whose patriotic activities are well known, have through the efforts of their seasonal em ployment committee. Miss Bruce. Miss Rlppey and Miss Spooner, enlisted a body of teachers for work in saving the berry crops, and 50 of them will start work next Monday morning, leaving from the Union depot a 8 :30 a. m. Miss Harriet Thayer, president of the association, and Miss Jessie McGregor, retiring president, are among the num ber enlisted, . and the teachers are an ticipating combining a useful service with a healthful and pleasurable vaca tion. Chapter H. of theP.E- O. Sisterhood of Eugene held the last meeting of the year at the home of. Mrs. W. Polders on Monday evening. The time was spent in a business Way and plans were made for next yeax's work. V ' Proof that Some Women do Avoid Operations Mrs. Etta Dorion, of Ogdensburg, Wis., says ' I suffered from female troubles which caused piercing pains like. a knife through my back and side. I finally lost au my strength so I had to go to bed. The doctor advised an operation but I would not listen to it. I thought of what I had read about Lrdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and tried it.' The first bottle brought great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me. All women who hare female trouble of any kind should try Lydia . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." How Mrs. Boyd Avoided an Operation. , Canton, Ohio. "I suffered from a female trouble which caused me much suffering, and two doctors decided that I wo aid bare to go through an operation Deiore l could , get well. "My mother, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pink- nam's vegetaoie uompouna. aansea me to try it D- xore submitting to an operation, iz relieved me irom my troubles so I can do my house work without an; difficulty. I advise any woman who is afflicted with female troubles to gite Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound a trial and it will do as much Vav ' -Mm 1ist Pnvn 1491 M-H I 2T. E., Canton. Ohio. . . . Every Sick Woman Shof v - l I "-- 1.(11 11 VI 11 aTf MM JUkkw - T- fl Biff f ' 1 tl'f M I El 9 111 "mm , 1 mtf ft III? .':,V; l Ilrtir ii lUtiM 1 Krfn i f ir ' mwA Before Submitting To An Operation ! m B FRATERNAL NOTES Orient Lodge, I. O. O. F., Wednesday night held a session to confer Initia tory, first and second degrees upon a class of five candidates by a special dispensation, not more than two de grees being usually conferred on one night. Three of the five have been asked by Uncle Sam to take the American flag to Berlin, and will leave Saturday via Camp Lewis to do it. Therefore the dispensation. Fri day night Hassalo lodge at First and Alder streets, will confer the third de gree on a large class of candidates and will include several classes from other lodges, thereby completing the degree work for all those going to the front at this , time. The formal instituting of Sunnyside chapter No. 128, Order of Eastern Star. Monday night at Dawes hall. East Yamhill - and Kast Thirty-fourth street, was attended by a large num ber of members and visitors. - The ceremonies were in charge- of Mrs. Mabel Settlemeier, worthy grand ma tron of the order, 'assisted by Mrs. Lena Mendenhall, past grand matron ; H. H. Young, grand patron ; Mrs. Al bert S. McMurphy, associate grand matron, and other grand officers. Sev eral petitions for membership were received. Refreshments were served. The worthy patrons of the different Portland local chapters of the Order of jEastern Star are to banquet ,v the worthy matrons on Sunday at a lo cation not- given out but understood to be on the "Washington side of the Columbia river. Parties desiring to connect are advised to go : 15 miles up the river from the Vancouver bridge and head in where the rest do. A. C.Burrows. "pat dictator of the Loyal Order of Moose at Spokane. Is actively at work la Vancouver for the lodge there,' and is in a fair way to build up its membership to 600. or even more. Portland lodge degree team-are expected shortly to visit the Vancouper papa.-: ..-.' :.., ... - Wednesday nigh Samaritan lodge, X. O. O. F.. gave first and second de greea to a class of 1L five" of whom were from Villa lodge, and. three from North Portland lodge. - Friday niffht those going to the front will receive the third degree Hi Hassale lodge. ; mur w. . a. in. - , . There's Oaly Oae Way - to secure a aatln akin. ' Apply Satin Skia Cream, then Satin Skin Powder. - Adv. When the O-Cedar Polish Mop comes into your home all the hard work of dusting, cleaning and polishing hardwood floors and furniture goes out; These drudgeries become dreams of the past. The work you save is a consideration. The time you save is another. And so is the money you save, for one O-Cedar Polish Mop will oudast several brooms. Then consider how much brighter and prettier all your woodwork and floors will look. Remember this, with the O-Cedar Polish Mop you dust, clean and polish all at one time. 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